![]() Updated on by Antonio Villas-Boas: Updated review to include Mint's Unlimited Data plan, which was not available when this review was first published on. For significantly less than what you pay on T-Mobile and other premium carriers, Mint gives you a strong set of core essentials for a robust budget mobile experience. If you know that Mint's coverage is good enough for you, Mint is a very tempting and less expensive choice. Or you can ask locals in neighborhood forums like. Your best bet to figuring out whether Mint works in the areas you'll be frequenting is asking friends and family who use T-Mobile, or even Mint itself if they're already on the service. With that said, Verizon and AT&T are significantly more expensive, and Mint's coverage should be good for a decent majority of people. Verizon and AT&T are often touted to have better coverage, at least in rural areas, and my own experience with various carriers generally correlates with that consensus. If Mint (or T-Mobile) doesn't have good coverage in the areas you frequent, Mint may not be for you. The T-Mobile part is perhaps the most important thing you need to consider when considering Mint - it runs on T-Mobile's network, and you need to figure out whether that coverage is going to be good enough for you. Here's Mint Mobile, in one sentence: it's a cheaper version of T-Mobile that's perfect for anyone who knows that T-Mobile's coverage works for them.
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